Title: Social Economy in Romania. An overview
1Social Economy in Romania.An overview
Valentin Burada Civil Society Development
Foundation
Gdynia 25 June 2008
2General Context
- Lack of mutual trust within the Romanian society
- Non-functional subsidiarity
- Top-down definition of regions
- Lack of local resources
- Lack of true local initiative - donor-driven
behavior - Trade unions perceived as politicized/corrupt
3Main actors
- Cooperatives (cooperative societies credit
cooperatives agricultural cooperatives) - Mutual Organizations (Mutual Help Houses - CAR,
Pensioner Mutual Help Houses) - Nongovernmental Organizations
- Direct Economic Activities
- Externalization of public interest services
(Social services, Medical services, Education and
Professional Training Services)
4Cooperatives
- In 2004 there were 2129 active cooperatives 50
in commerce and services 25 in handcraft - 0,1 of the total workforce was employed within
cooperatives (including agricultural
cooperatives) - In 2005 - Law no.1/2005 regarding the
organization and functioning of cooperatives - gt In 2007 - 38,177 members
- Example
- in 2004 Cooperatia de consum included 1,513
organizations in 2,688 communes, 13,000 villages
and 230 towns - in 2007 Cooperatia de consum 1,073
organizations mainly in the rural areas, of which
1.009 are associated in the 41 county Unions -
5Social Economy in Romania Challenges
(Cooperatives)
- Weak cooperative movement strong resistance to
the idea of agricultural cooperatives and even
agricultural associations - Other cooperatives deligitimized as being heirs
of former communist cooperatives - Strong influence and control by cooperative
central structures (FEDERALCOOP, CREDITCOOP and
CENTROCOOP) - at stakes the properties of
former communist cooperatives - Credit cooperatives discredited by fraud and
bankrupcy in the 2000s (e.g. Banca Populara,
2001)
6NGOs as emerging social economy actors in Romania
- NGOs are the most important actors in social and
community development in Romania - The specific of service provider NGOs places them
in a closer position to the concept of social
enterprise - Profit is not their main goal
- Members have equal rights
- Flexibility and Innovation
- Voluntary participation of members and their
involvement in the provided services
7Organizatii neguvernamentale
- Social Services
- Health Services
- Education
- Employment
8NGOs as emerging social economy actors in Romania
- NGOs are the most important private actors on the
social service market in Romania
9Social services (1)
- Financing of social services provided by NGOs is
done largely through grants from international
and private donors - There are very few cases where social services
are paid by the beneficiaries. This type of
services are considered as direct economic
activities and are subject to taxation. As an
exception, they are tax exempt from profit tax if
they are provided by the orgaization to its
members, in exchange for a fee or other type of
contributions.
10Social services (2)
- Forms of social contracting
- Grants (Law 350/2005)
- Public tenders (OUG 34/2006)
- Service contracts (OG 68/2003)
- Public-private partnerships (OG 68/2003)
- Subsidies (Legea 34/1998)
11Social service in Romania Challenges
- The externalization system is overregulated (4
totally different instruments of social
contracting) - Financial allocation is not based on a local
strategy regarding social needs - The financing of social assistance system is
centralized (70) - Focus on social benefits and not on social
services - Financing of services for children remains
prioritary
12Health services
- Law 95/2006 regarding reform in the health field
mentions NGOs as eligible entities to provide
private emergency health care services as well as
private hospital services within private health
units. - In practice very few NGO providers palliative
care and home care for elderly (combines social
services and health services problematic
funding)
13Education
- NGOs can establish education units accredited by
the Ministry of Education or local School
Inspectorates. - in 2004/2005 there were 62 private units of upper
education, with 155,000 students (25 of the
total) and 4,000 employees (40 of the total) - 50,000 beneficiaries in the pre-universitary
private education system.
14Employment
- Law 84/1995 NGOs can organize trainings for
qualification, professional specialization and
professional reconversion. - In 2005 ¼ of the registered such training
programmes registered at national level were
offered by NGOs, professional associations,
profesional associations, trade unions and
student associations - Trainings are funded from public sources, Phare,
donors and own resources
15Economic activities
- Romanian law allows NGOs to develop economic
activities, yet it limits their scope to the main
objective/mission of the organization (Art. 48,
OG 26/2000). - For economic activities with no relations to the
main objective/mission of the organization, NGOs
can establish an economic enterprise as entity
distinct from the organization. - NGOs are exempt from profit tax on economic
activities amounting up to 15,000 Euro in a
fiscal year, but not above 10 of the total
revenues exempted from profit tax - For the revenues exceeding this level the 16
tax
16Economic dimension of NGOs
17Revenues of NGO service providers
1
Venit.din cotizatii
1
12
15
Venituri din donatii
0
Venituri din sponsorizari
2
1
Venituri din dobanzi
0
Venituri din dividenente
Venituri din cote-parti primite potrivit
statutului
Ajutoare si imprumuturi nerambursabile
din surse externe
Subventii primite de la buget
22
17
Alte venituri din activitatile fara scop
patrimonial - total (rd.11 la 17)
Venituri din despagubiri
Venituri din diferente de curs valutar
Venituri din reclama si publicitate
Venituri pentru care se datoreaza impozit
7
pe spectacole
4
Venituri din valorificarea bunurilor
11
4
1
2
Venituri din taxele de inregistrare
Subventii primite de la buget
Alte venituri
18Social Economy in Romania Challenges (NGOs)
- Grant seeking opportunism
- Unsustainable job creation
- Lack of community involvement and ownership
- Civil society or social economy organizations are
often seen as parallel to the (emerging) welfare
state - Positive approach places to outsource state
provision of services and assistance - Negative approach rivals to state provision
19- CIVIL SOCIETY DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION /
- FUNDATIA pentru DEZVOLTAREA SOCIETATII CIVILE
- Splaiul Independentei nr. 2k, et. 4 sector 3,
Bucuresti, RomâniaTel 4-021-310-0177 Fax
4-021-310-0180 - valentin.burada_at_fdsc.ro
- www.fdsc.ro